09/15/2012
The Obama administration is happy to note that its DREAMer work permits for illegal alien scammers are now being doled out.
Here in California (where the June unemployment rate was 10.7%) a local pro-diversity scribbler focused on a couple of recipients now thrust into the legal labor marketplace. The San Francisco Bay Area alone is estimated to get 65,000 DREAMy workers.
Interestingly, only 82,000 aliens have applied thus far, as reported by the Christian Science Monitor: DREAM Act-lite: 7 in 100 eligible illegal immigrants apply, so far, Sept 19. Perhaps many are fearful of admitting the degree to which they have broken the law, such as stealing a Social Security number, which is a felony.
Not to worry! President Obama doesn’t want any screw-ups or negative press about his hispanic freebie right before the election. Border officers have already been told that “DREAMer” is the magic word that overrules law enforcement.
And as an immigration lawyer recounts in the article below, once the illegal masses realize that every alien wins, they will flock to the local rubber stamp office, er neighborhood USCIS.
Obama administration approves first 29 work permits for young illegal immigrants, By Matt O’Brien, San Jose Mercury News, September 14, 2012
While some remain wary about coming forward, 82,000 young illegal immigrants sought work permits from the Obama administration in the past month, and a small group of 29 people learned their applications were approved in recent days.
Soon, Mayra Gomez could join them. She and her husband, a private and mechanic in the U.S. Army Reserve, received a letter at their East Palo Alto home on Monday from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services telling Gomez to come to the agency’s San Francisco office to get her fingerprints taken.
Once a sign of a looming deportation, this fingerprint check was a message to Gomez she had one final step before she can get a work permit.
“I’m thinking about it all the time,” said the 23-year-old UC Berkeley graduate, whose family brought her across the border from Mexico when she was a child.
Gomez declined a well-paying job offer this summer because she has no legal right to work, but that could change soon. More than just a job, however, Gomez said she is looking forward to living without the constant fear she could be torn apart from her U.S. citizen husband and their 1-year-old son.
Demographers estimate more than 1.2 million young illegal immigrants, and about 350,000 in California, could immediately qualify for the Obama administration’s two-year work permits and protection from deportation, but nationwide only 82,361 had applied in the first month since the Obama administration began accepting applications on Aug. 15.
Officials said it will take an average of four to six months before applicants get an answer. For Gomez and some others in the Bay Area, however, the notice is coming sooner. She applied on Aug. 28 and has her fingerprint appointment in two weeks.
The federal government said Friday it has now scheduled 63,717 such “biometric” appointments at immigration offices around the country, and 1,660 cases have gone through the background check and imminently await a decision. Twenty-nine cases have already been approved.
“By approving some cases quickly, it alleviates some of the fears of other applicants,” said Mark Silverman of the San Francisco-based Immigrant Legal Resource Center.
An immigration lawyer in the Bay Area since 1983, Silverman said he was pleasantly surprised that so many people have already applied but knows more will come out of the shadows once they see signs that the promised relief actually works.
“The same thing happened during the amnesty program of ‘87 and ‘88,” Silverman said. “After people saw their friends and neighbors were getting their applications approved, that encouraged more people to apply.”
The immigration agency recently emailed San Francisco resident Sarah Souza informing her it received her application and was routing it to a Southern California processing center. Never before was Souza so delighted to get a form letter.
“I was a little emotional,” she said. “I feel like I’m part of this country. I just need the opportunity to show that I can do great things for this country, that I’m not a criminal.”
Souza and her sister first entered the United States to visit Disneyland on a youth trip from Brazil in the summer of 2001. She was 15, her sister 12, and their tourist visas expired in three months, but they stayed to join their mother, a nanny who had been living in San Francisco for two years.
Those eligible for relief must have come to the United States before they were 16, not be older than 30, lived here continuously since 2007, have a record free of serious crimes, graduated high school or are in school or the military. They must also pay a $465 fee to apply. The federal relief defers deportations but doesn’t offer the benefits of legal immigration or citizenship, only a temporary work permit that can be renewed after two years.
Many who are eligible have been cautious about applying, some fearing that coming forward could leave them exposed if Republican Mitt Romney wins the election and reverses the Obama administration directive next year.
Romney has criticized the Obama directive as politically-motivated and said he would replace it with a long-term solution but hasn’t said what that solution would be. The Republican National Convention made little mention last month of the directive, which is widely popular among Latino voters, but House Judiciary Chairman Lamar Smith, R-Texas, said on Thursday that the fast-moving relief program was putting the country in danger.
“Such a quick turnaround for these amnesty applications raises serious concerns about fraud and a lack of thorough vetting,” Smith said in a statement.
In contrast, the Democratic National Convention embraced the young immigrants, dubbed “dreamers” after the long-sought Dream Act that would have granted them legal residency but failed to pass through Congress in 2010.
At crowded informational meetings around the Bay Area, Silverman has encouraged young immigrants with the cleanest records to apply soon because he knows that the Obama administration has political reasons to show that its relief is working before the November election and also knows that Romney, if he wins, could stop the program but would be less likely to turn back the clock against those who already applied.
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.